Jurassic World Camp Cretaceous Season 1 features a racially and ethnically diverse group of six teen campers, including a Black protagonist (Darius), a Muslim track star (Yaz), a Latina cowgirl (Sammy), an Asian-American rich kid (Kenji), and others voiced by diverse actors like Jenna Ortega and Paul-Mikél Williams. Creators and cast interviews highlight this diversity as an intentional update to the classic Jurassic formula, making it more reflective of modern youth compared to past iterations like The Breakfast Club with dinosaurs. However, these elements remain background and incidental, serving as organic representation without clashing with the source material or setting. The core premise and storytelling center purely on thrilling dinosaur survival adventure, teamwork, friendship, and personal growth amid chaos on Isla Nublar, with no LGBTQ+ representation, identity politics, systemic oppression narratives, gender ideology, or social justice lectures in Season 1. Conflicts arise from dinosaurs and survival challenges, not ideological framing. Audience reception praises the fun, scary excitement for kids, with no significant backlash or 'woke' complaints specific to this season, allowing the show to deliver unadulterated entertainment free from political intrusions.